Memories Come Late at Night
Memories come late at night.
My brother’s sixth birthday
and his crying sounds more like a prayer.
My father is
just back from the pub
and he’s staring in the bathroom mirror
but not looking at his eyes.
He turns the sink on and then off and then on
and I watch his hands shake under the water,
which turns red, like pomegranates, with blood.
I’m done, goddammit,
he says to my brother, I’m done.
Memories come late at night.
It is Christmas and it is raining
but we are pretending that it’s snow.
My grandfather’s hand is scarred and blistered and cut
and it is pulling me in to the cemetery
where, one day, he will go.
These are my parents, he smiles and then
lays blue flowers on his mother’s stone,
and, because the rain is pouring down,
the flowers begin to wilt, just like his eyes.
I haven’t been here in so long,
he says, so very long.
Memories come late at night.
Summertime
and the air is filled with sun-kissed skies
and dandelion weeds and butterflies
and gentle things that float
in the warm honey breeze.
Your lips are soft and I’m kissing you
where the stars fall and hold the nighttime sea,
where the sky pours out, across our backs,
and lingers along the surface of the bubbling water.
I’ll never forget this,
I whisper to the moon, never.
Memories come late at night.
June, years and years later,
and I cannot sleep.